| ed marszewski on 15 Jan 2001 09:49:05 -0000 |
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| [Nettime-bold] COUP 2K Part 3 |
COUP 2K PART 3
The Nixon Myth
Another propaganda tool was the ubiquitous story of Richard Nixon’s
"gracious" concession to JFK in 1960. Amidst charges that the close
election had been rigged by the Democrats, Nixon purported felt the charges
could be proved but he didn’t want to "tear the country apart." Ignoring
his advisors, the story goes, he chose instead to go quietly and not contest
the election. The irony was delicious: the evil reactionary Nixon was more
of a statesman than liberal Gore. Just as importantly for Bush, with Daley’s
son serving as Gore’s post-election point man the unspoken implication was
that this was all just rotten fruit from an old tree.
But in reality, "magnanimous Nixon" is a fabrication. Back in
October, historian David Greenberg revealed in the online magazine, Slate,
that in 1960 the Republicans had actually "launched a veritable crusade" to
overturn the election. The parallels are rather startling.
Nixon friends in the press pushed the story and helped give the
charges credibility. The RNC chairman sent telegrams to state party
officials urging them to pursue recounts. A Nixon Recount Committee raised
some $100,000. Lawsuits were filed in at least three states. "They succeeded
in obtaining recounts, empanelling grand juries, and involving US attorneys
and the FBI," Greenberg wrote.58
Indeed, the legal brawling continued right up to Dec. 12, when the RNC
lost key cases in Illinois and Texas. In fairness, the Nixon fairy tale is
not a new one; Nixon himself had described the episode this way in his both
of his memoirs. But even after Greenberg penned a post-election op-ed piece
for the L.A. Times, none of the major news venues seemed to care about the
truth. "Dented but not derailed," Greenberg lamented later, "the
conventional-wisdom juggernaut rolled on."59
The Spoiler
Leading up to the election, one of the greatest fears of Republican
strategists must have been the possibility of Jesse Ventura running for the
White House on the Reform Party ticket. Judging by what happened, one
cannot help but wonder whether that party’s spectacular implosion was truly
organic.
In 1992, Ross Perot’s Reform Party bid was the Republican’s version of
Ralph Nader. By Republican reckoning, the eccentric billionaire’s 8% showing
had both cost President Bush the reelection and had ushered in their worst
nightmare: the Clinton presidency. In 1999, Gov. Ventura potentially posed
an even more serious threat. The former wrestler, as we all know, had
surprised everyone by handily winning the Minnesota governor’s race and then
delighted the press and public alike with his bluntly honest style. Even
more surprising, he did a pretty good job. Ventura was wildly popular, and
as the 2000 campaign grew closer there was wide speculation about whether he
would run for the presidency. Some felt he might even win.
Suddenly, in October 1999, archconservative and one-time Nixon protégé
Patrick Buchanan made a big show of defecting from the Republican Party,
leaping into the reluctant arms of the Reform Party. He announced he would
seek Reform’s nomination for president, and then proceeded to publicly spew
a steady stream of rhetoric that was extreme even for him. Meanwhile,
Buchanan brought with him a coterie of other reactionaries, who soon wormed
their way into the Reform Party infrastructure.
In short order, the Reform Party was viciously split between the
extreme right-wingers loyal to Buchanan and pretty much everyone else. Gov.
Ventura, the Reform Party’s golden boy, quit the party in disgust and held a
press conference to pin it on Buchanan. He then announced there was "no
way" he would run for president.
Still, internal tensions continued to escalate, and the drama
dominated media coverage of the party. By the time their national
convention finally convened last August, the disagreements had become
full-blown warfare. Rival nominee John Hagelin and his moderate supporters
stormed out and formed a new coalition, pledged to fight Buchanan to the
bitter end, and filed lawsuits to secure desperately needed federal campaign
matching funds. In the end, the Federal Election Committee settled the
matter when it awarded the $12.6 million in matching funds to Buchanan’s
faction. By this time, there were less than two months until the election,
the Reform Party’s message had been completely usurped and discredited by
the strange brawling, and Buchanan was polling a mere 2% thanks to his
fascistic pronouncements. For all intents and purposes, the Reform Party
had been destroyed from the inside, and any possibility that it would
receive federal matching funds in the 2004 election had been safely
eliminated.
Such spoiler campaigns have been a common tactic used in CIA covert
action. For example, in Chile’s 1964 campaign the main recipient of CIA
covert support was the conservative Christian Democratic Party. But as a
Senate investigation later revealed, the CIA also threw considerable support
to the more extreme right-wing Radical Party "in order to enhance the
Christian Democrats’ image as a moderate progressive party being attacked
from the right as well as the left."60 Buchanan served this function
perfectly, regularly spearing even the most extremist Republican positions
as namby-pamby liberalism that betrayed the party’s "true heritage."
Historically, the CIA has not limited such activities to foreign
countries. In 1967, elements working under the Agency’s notorious Operation
CHAOS61 were used to destroy a new third-party coalition forming to back a
presidential bid by Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., with pediatrician/author
Benjamin Spock as his VP. When the National Conference for New Politics held
a national convention at Chicago’s Palmer House, agents provocateur with
ties to the CIA used tactics nearly identical to those displayed during the
2000 Reform Party convention to stir up arguments, hammer on divisive
issues, and actively prevent any kind of consensus. At one point, one group
even (supposedly) threatened to kidnap Dr. King. The sure-fire King-Spock
ticket was strangled in the cradle, and their third party died along with
it. Less than a year later, King was assassinated while trying to organize
a Poor People’s March on Washington.62
Buchanan himself is no stranger to covert action disguised as electoral
politics. For example, in April 1972, while working for the Nixon
administration, he wrote a secret memo outlining a comprehensive plan for
what he termed "covert operations" to be directed against the Democrats
during their national convention in Miami. Buchanan’s secret plan included
"harassment exercises, and embarrassment exercises for the Democrats."
Their secret operative would "put demonstrations together, get leaflets out,
start rumors, and generally foul up scheduled events." The plan also called
for extensive media ops, including false stories that would then have to be
denied by the Democrats.63
Supreme Court (In)Justice
On Friday, Dec. 8, when the Florida Supreme Court issued its final
order to count the votes in accordance with Florida statutes, Bush’s top
supporters took to the airwaves. Echoing the 1989 call to arms against Iraq,
"This judicial aggression must not stand," growled Tom DeLay.64 Within a
few days, a different kind of "judicial aggression" ended it all.
Spearheading the Bush cause inside the Court was Justice Antonin
Scalia, Bush’s favorite to be the next Chief Justice. When the fateful
emergency stay of the Florida Court’s order issued Dec. 9, it was Scalia who
took the unusual step of writing a concurring opinion. It was he who
invoked imminent "irreparable harm…to the country" should all the votes be
tallied. Even more unusual, Scalia’s concurrence made it clear that Bush
had "a substantial probability of success" before the briefs were even
filed. This set the stage for eventual Bush victory
A protégé of Robert Bork, Scalia entered federal service under
President Nixon in 1971. When Nixon resigned in disgrace in 1974, President
Ford assigned Scalia to determine legal ownership of the Nixon tapes and
documents. He ruled in favor of Nixon.65
In 1977, Scalia quit rather than work under President Carter, returning
to the Beltway in 1982 when Reagan appointed him to the US Court of Appeals
for Washington, DC. During his tenure there, Judge Scalia played a
questionable role in another controversial vote-fraud case.
Since 1970, brothers Ken and Jim Collier have obsessively hunted a
massive conspiracy they have christened "Votescam."66
In 1985, the Collier brothers filed a series of pro se civil suits
targeting those they believed were behind an effort to suppress their
evidence of nationwide voter fraud. Their suit against the Republican
National Committee fell in the jurisdiction of the Washington Court of
Appeals. The RNC tried to get the case dismissed, but a two-judge panel (not
including Scalia) unanimously decided to send the case to trial in District
Court.
Weeks after the ruling, Scalia quietly slipped a signed "killer memo"
into the case file stating that in his view it was obvious the case had no
merit and recommending "the district court’s dismissal of the action."67
When the Colliers discovered the existence of Scalia’s "counterfeit
concurrence," they sued him on the grounds that he had violated legal
procedure.
Shortly after the episode, Reagan appointed Scalia to the US Supreme
Court. During the confirmation hearings Ken Collier testified about the
affair but, obviously, the Senators were unmoved and approved Scalia anyway.
Ironically, when the Colliers lost their suit against the RNC, they
appealed to the Supreme Court. It declined to hear the case.68
Conflicts of Interest Violated the Law
Whenever any election-related case was heard by a Democratic judge,
Republican cries of conflict of interest received wide media play. But
curiously, when it came to the US Supreme Court, serious conflicts of
interest barely made a ripple.
In fact, Justice Scalia violated federal statutes when he failed to
recuse himself from both of the election cases. Two of his sons work for
law firms that worked on the Bush post-election challenges.
Eugene Scalia, for example, is a partner in the Washington office of
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, the law firm that represented the Bush campaign in
oral arguments before the Court. When the press got wind of this, Eugene
told reporters that he was not working directly on the case.69
However, the law is quite clear on this matter. It requires that a
justice recuse himself from any case in which their spouse or child is
"known by the judge to have an interest that could be substantially affected
by the outcome of the proceeding."70 Whether or not the child is working
directly on a given case is irrelevant: the defining concern is an affected
interest. Clearly, as a partner in a firm delivering historic cases before
the Supreme Court, Eugene Scalia’s "interest" would indeed be "substantially
affected" by either winning or losing. Having won, just imagine the fees
his firm can now charge, the prestige it now enjoys. As a partner, Eugene
Scalia profits directly from this, both financially and professionally.
A former White House special counsel joined the call for Justice Scalia
to recuse himself. When reporters pressed the issue, Court spokeswoman
Kathy Arberg said only that "the court would have no comment on the
matter."71 And that was that.
Justice Clarence Thomas had an even more serious conflict of interest
which violated federal law. His wife, Virginia Lamp Thomas, was (and is)
gathering and processing applications for the Bush cabinet. Perversely, a
Bush spokesman implied the charges were nothing more than veiled sexism.
"Like many professional women, Mrs. Thomas should not be judged by her
spouse," he said.72
Mrs. Thomas, a former Republican Congressional aide, works for the
Heritage Foundation (www.heritage.org). The conservative think-tank first
made its first real mark in 1981 when it’s Mandate for Leadership was
adopted as the "bible" of the incoming Reagan Administration. Since then,
the Heritage Foundation has been a cornerstone of Republican presidencies,
strongly influencing everything from domestic policy to national security to
the very structure of the government itself.
It also happens to enjoy a revolving-door relationship with US
intelligence. Its Board of Trustees73 includes: Richard Mellon Scaife, the
right-wing billionaire and Reagan-era propagandist who has personally
bankrolled most of the "Clinton Scandal" industry; Holland H. Coors, beer
heiress and trustee of the Adolph Coors Foundation, which helped fund the
Contra war; Midge Dector, former chair of the anti-communist Committee for a
Free World; and Frank Shakespeare, who served as Reagan’s ambassador to the
Vatican during the P2 Lodge74 scandal, and director of Radio Free Europe.
In her own job at the Heritage Foundation, Mrs. Thomas has solicited
resumes "for transition purposes" from the government oversight committees
of Congress.75 By press time, no fewer than eight of Bush’s top cabinet
designees have worked for or have ties to the Heritage Foundation.76
Despite all this, Mrs. Thomas sternly told the NY Times, "There is no
conflict here." She explained that because she "rarely discusses" Court
matters with her husband, there was no reason for Justice Thomas to recuse
himself from the landmark Bush cases.77
But again, the federal statutes are crystal clear that it is the
relationship itself and not whether any "discussions" take place that
determines when a justice is required to recuse himself. Despite the
clear-cut violation, of course, Justice Thomas heard the case and voted with
the majority in favor of his wife’s ultimate patron.
Lastly, although this pales by comparison, press reports indicate clear
signs of early prejudice on the part of Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, a key
swing vote in the Bush v. Gore case. As Time’s web site recently reported,
"according to the Wall Street Journal, O'Connor's husband said at an
election-night party that his wife, a 70-year-old breast-cancer survivor,
would like to retire but that she would be reluctant to leave if a Democrat
won the presidency and got to select her successor."78
No Justice, No Peace
When Katherine Harris certified the Florida vote the Sunday after
Thanksgiving, she illegally closed off the state Capitol from the press and
public. When a few reporters managed to get in with the help of a state
employee, Harris tried to have them all arrested. As the Miami Herald
related, the reporters "had to call lawyers to stay in a public building
even while state business was being conducted."79 While attorneys and
security officers squabbled, Harris unilaterally disqualified most of the
recounts that had been mandated and sanctioned by the Florida courts.
The US Supreme Court had based its controversial final ruling on the
premise on the immutability of Dec. 12th as the deadline for certifying
electors. Yet by that date, no fewer than 20 states – nearly half the
country – still had not submitted their lists of electors to the federal
government. "We consider the deadline to be Dec. 18 with no penalty," said
National Archives spokeswoman Susan Cooper.80 No one noticed or seemed to
care.
The final indignity came on Saturday, Jan. 6, when Congress met in
joint session to officially count and certify the electoral votes. But
fewer than half of our elected officials bothered to even show up. Legally,
at least 50% must be in attendance for there to be a quorum. Without a
quorum, the session is not legally recognized and any actions taken are,
technically, null and void.
Florida Representatives Peter Deutsch and Alcee Hastings mounted a
formal complaint, rightly claiming that this was not even a legal meeting of
Congress. But the rules require that a Senator – any Senator – must also
sign the complaint for it to be recognized. None would.
One by one, members of the Congressional Black Caucus took the podium
to protest the Florida controversies and the sham certification about to
take place. "I don't care that [our complaint] is not signed by a senator,"
cried Rep. Maxine Waters, the California Democrat who worked so hard to
expose CIA-Contra drug dealing. Vice President Gore himself, presiding over
the joint session, banged his gavel. "The chair would advise that the rules
do care," he said. 81 It did not seem to matter that those same rules
called for a quorum.
Finally, the Black Caucus and a few others stood and walked out. A
smattering of applause followed them. Then the no-quorum Congress proceeded
to illegally certify the electoral vote.
"May God bless our new president and vice president, and may God bless
the United States of America," a stoic Gore declared when it was done.82
At press time, an unofficial count of all the Florida votes by
independent news organizations shows Bush’s lead shriveling into
nothingness.
Prepare for the Weirdness
Perhaps Hunter S. Thompson summed it up best in his Nov. 20 column for
ESPN.com. "If this were the world of sports," he observed, "it would be
like playing a Super Bowl that goes into 19 scoreless Overtimes and never
actually Ends. …or four LA Lakers stars being murdered in different places
on the same day. Guaranteed Fear and Loathing. Abandon all hope. Prepare for
the Weirdness. Get familiar with Cannibalism. Good luck, Doc."83
A word to the wise: get your passport while you still can.
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